alb9082682

A Kill at Ashdown Park by James Seymour, c. (1702-1752) in 1743. The History of Foxhunting by Roger Longrigg, page 65. The setting for this lively hunting scene was the Berkshire estate of Fulwar, 4th Baron Craven, who is shown in profile on a dark grey hunter to the left. His hunting-lodge, Ashdown House, appears in the distance. Seymour's subject-matter was limited entirely to sporting scenes. He painted in a rather naive manner, using an unsophisticated form of perspective and with the figures and animals arranged in stiff poses. His interests lay rather in the decorative patterns in the composition. This is particularly apparent in the contrived grouping of hounds surrounding the huntsman holding up the dead fox.

A Kill at Ashdown Park by James Seymour, c. (1702-1752) in 1743. The History of Foxhunting by Roger Longrigg, page 65. The setting for this lively hunting scene was the Berkshire estate of Fulwar, 4th Baron Craven, who is shown in profile on a dark grey hunter to the left. His hunting-lodge, Ashdown House, appears in the distance. Seymour's subject-matter was limited entirely to sporting scenes. He painted in a rather naive manner, using an unsophisticated form of perspective and with the figures and animals arranged in stiff poses. His interests lay rather in the decorative patterns in the composition. This is particularly apparent in the contrived grouping of hounds surrounding the huntsman holding up the dead fox.
Teilen
pinterestPinterest
twitterTwitter
facebookFacebook
emailEmail

Zu einem anderen Lightbox hinzufügen

Zu einem anderen Lightbox hinzufügen

add to lightbox print share
Haben Sie bereits ein Konto? Anmelden
Sie haben kein Konto? Registrieren
Dieses Bild kaufen. Nutzung auswählen:
Daten werden geladen...
A Kill at Ashdown Park by James Seymour, c. (1702-1752) in 1743. The History of Foxhunting by Roger Longrigg, page 65. The setting for this lively hunting scene was the Berkshire estate of Fulwar, 4th Baron Craven, who is shown in profile on a dark grey hunter to the left. His hunting-lodge, Ashdown House, appears in the distance. Seymour's subject-matter was limited entirely to sporting scenes. He painted in a rather naive manner, using an unsophisticated form of perspective and with the figures and animals arranged in stiff poses. His interests lay rather in the decorative patterns in the composition. This is particularly apparent in the contrived grouping of hounds surrounding the huntsman holding up the dead fox.
Bildnachweis:
Album / TopFoto
Freigaben (Releases):
Model: Nein - Eigentum: Nein
Rechtefragen?
Bildgröße:
3398 x 2555 px | 24.8 MB
Druckgröße:
28.8 x 21.6 cm | 11.3 x 8.5 in (300 dpi)
Schlüsselwörter: